ALBANY -- They've lost their pension credits and paid fines to the state, but now a handful
of lawyers -- including at least two in the Capital Region -- are in the cross hairs of a Long Island tax activist who wants
them disbarred for having themselves listed as school employees in order to improperly earn lucrative public pensions.

State Attorney General Andrew Cuomo's office found dozens of school district lawyers who worked as independent contractors
had over the years improperly listed themselves as employees of their school clients -- thus qualifying for taxpayer-funded
pension credits. State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli also investigated the matter, and lawmakers have cited it as a clear example
of taxpayer abuse.

Now, Long Island tax activist George Deabold has filed professional standards complaints against two Albany-area lawyers,
Cornelia Cahill and John Sise. If the complaints are upheld, sanctions could range from censure to suspension or even disbarment.

In October 2008, Cahill and Sise settled charges with Cuomo's office that they were wrongfully listed as employees of the
Hamilton-Fulton-Montgomery BOCES when they should have been listed as outside contractors. Cahill agreed to pay $270,000 in
the settlement while Sise paid $35,000.

Despite several attempts. neither attorney could be reached for comment.

Deabold also filed complaints against Long Island lawyers Lawrence Reich, Carol Hoffman and Jerome Ehrlich. Reich was the
first lawyer to be investigated after a report two years ago in the Long Island newspaper Newsday found he had been listed
as a full-time employee at five school districts.

There's no guarantee that any of Deabold's complaints will lead to disbarment or and other sanction.

Disbarment complaints are filed through the court system's regional appellate divisions; its Third Department covers Albany
and the surrounding region. Complaints and subsequent deliberations remain secret unless a sanction is levied by the court,
said Mark Ochs, chief attorney for the Third Department's Committee on Professional Standards, which hears the complaints.

Typically, Ochs said, a sanction results when a lawyer exhibits chronic neglect of cases and clients, or misuses monies
such as escrow funds.

"We look for direct injury," said Ochs, who added that anybody can file a complaint.

The committee's job is to determine if the complaints are grounded. The 21-member committee includes three members who
are not lawyers.

Last year, there were about 2,500 complaints in the Third Department, which covers a 28-county area. Only 14 lawyers were
disbarred.

School lawyers aren't the only people Deabold is taking on: He also wants to see former Gov. Eliot Spitzer disbarred for
his tryst with a prostitute, the transgression that led to his 2008 resignation.

"How do you have the top attorney in the state of New York (patronizing) prostitutes and he doesn't get disbarred?" said
Deabold, who founded SchoolWatch, a Long Island fiscal watchdog Web site.

ALBANY -- They've lost their pension credits and paid fines to the state, but now a handful
of lawyers -- including at least two in the Capital Region -- are in the cross hairs of a Long Island tax activist who wants
them disbarred for having themselves listed as school employees in order to improperly earn lucrative public pensions.

State Attorney General Andrew Cuomo's office found dozens of school district lawyers who worked as independent contractors
had over the years improperly listed themselves as employees of their school clients -- thus qualifying for taxpayer-funded
pension credits. State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli also investigated the matter, and lawmakers have cited it as a clear example
of taxpayer abuse.

Now, Long Island tax activist George Deabold has filed professional standards complaints against two Albany-area lawyers,
Cornelia Cahill and John Sise. If the complaints are upheld, sanctions could range from censure to suspension or even disbarment.

In October 2008, Cahill and Sise settled charges with Cuomo's office that they were wrongfully listed as employees of the
Hamilton-Fulton-Montgomery BOCES when they should have been listed as outside contractors. Cahill agreed to pay $270,000 in
the settlement while Sise paid $35,000.

Despite several attempts. neither attorney could be reached for comment.

Deabold also filed complaints against Long Island lawyers Lawrence Reich, Carol Hoffman and Jerome Ehrlich. Reich was the
first lawyer to be investigated after a report two years ago in the Long Island newspaper Newsday found he had been listed
as a full-time employee at five school districts.

There's no guarantee that any of Deabold's complaints will lead to disbarment or and other sanction.

Disbarment complaints are filed through the court system's regional appellate divisions; its Third Department covers Albany
and the surrounding region. Complaints and subsequent deliberations remain secret unless a sanction is levied by the court,
said Mark Ochs, chief attorney for the Third Department's Committee on Professional Standards, which hears the complaints.

Typically, Ochs said, a sanction results when a lawyer exhibits chronic neglect of cases and clients, or misuses monies
such as escrow funds.

"We look for direct injury," said Ochs, who added that anybody can file a complaint.

The committee's job is to determine if the complaints are grounded. The 21-member committee includes three members who
are not lawyers.

Last year, there were about 2,500 complaints in the Third Department, which covers a 28-county area. Only 14 lawyers were
disbarred.

School lawyers aren't the only people Deabold is taking on: He also wants to see former Gov. Eliot Spitzer disbarred for
his tryst with a prostitute, the transgression that led to his 2008 resignation.

"How do you have the top attorney in the state of New York (patronizing) prostitutes and he doesn't get disbarred?" said
Deabold, who founded SchoolWatch, a Long Island fiscal watchdog Web site.

Cuomo wins round in pension fight

Temporary restraining orders denied as tool against investigation

First published: Saturday, May 24, 2008

ALBANY -- Attorney General Andrew Cuomo won the first round Friday in a court fight spawned
by his ongoing probe of alleged pension fund abuse, beating back an attempt by Albany lawyer James Roemer to get a temporary
restraining order to stop the inquiry.

Roemer, who is representing four attorneys under investigation by Cuomo and state Comptroller
Tom DiNapoli, argued the probe was harming his clients and others under investigation.

But Cuomo's counsel, Henry Greenberg, successfully argued before Albany County State Supreme Court Justice Gerald Connolly
that restraining orders are not typically used to stop state agencies from conducting investigations.

"They are asking in effect to stop two state agencies, two heads of state agencies ... to stop these investigations in
their tracks," said Greenberg, adding later, "I've never seen anything like it."

Roemer filed suit last week against Cuomo and DiNapoli, who have been conducting separate but parallel probes of lawyers
for school districts and other government entities around the state. These lawyers have been listed as employees to earn taxpayer-funded
pension credits -- a practice Cuomo and DiNapoli say is wrong. They say the lawyers are independent contractors who are ineligible
for the benefits.

But Roemer, who himself collects a pension from his work as a municipal lawyer, has maintained that past comptrollers
knowingly allowed the practice.

The investigation by Cuomo and DiNapoli is wide-ranging. Earlier this month, the Times Union reported Albany County judge
Stephen Herrick earned pension credits while he served as a lawyer for the Albany school district. On Friday, Roemer noted
Cuomo has subpoenaed Herrick, Roemer and others whose pension credits are now in question.

Additionally, last week Roemer was fired by Sullivan County, which had used him in labor contract negotiations. He suggested
publicity surrounding the pension affair was hurting the reputations of those being probed.

"Much has been written in the press because that's where this case has been publicized so far," he said. "We think this
(court) is the format where issues in this case need to be decided, not in the court of public opinion."

Newsday.com

Mills makes move

Education commissioner comes down on double-dipping, but it took
too long

May 23, 2008

State Education Commissioner Richard Mills announced yesterday that he'll overhaul the double-dip
system that allows retired school administrators to earn a pension while continuing to work. It's a good move, but he should
have acted sooner.

People have raised the issue before. Suffolk County District Attorney Thomas Spota reported on efforts to milk the system in September 2006. At
a hearing at Farmingdale State College yesterday, Attorney General Andrew Cuomo produced an application from a school board
requesting permission to hire a retiree as superintendent. The application was written on letterhead that already included
the man's name - showing that the board expected a State Education Department rubber stamp. Where were the red flags?

That
Mills issued his statement yesterday morning, just prior to Cuomo's public hearing, seems very political. "Wonderful timing,"
quipped Assemb. Robert Sweeney (D-Lindenhurst) at the hearing.

Mills froze the so-called 211 waiver program for 60
days so that, he says, he can investigate and propose better administrative rules. But his department has not exactly been
a model of self-policing. Reforms should go further and include new laws with clear penalties.

Two state senators who
fight for Long Island
school funding, Dean Skelos (R-Rockville Centre) and Kenneth LaValle (R-Port Jefferson), indicated at the hearing that double-dipping
stories had embarrassed them. They've been answering pointed questions from constituents and upstate colleagues, too, who
wonder why Long Island needs so much state aid.

School officials are biting the hand
that feeds them. That's all the motivation they should need to clean up their act.

ATTORNEY
GENERAL CUOMO EXPANDS "DOUBLE DIPPING" INVESTIGATION TO EVERY SCHOOL DISTRICT IN NEW
YORKSTATE

CUOMO
TO HOLD PUBLIC HEARING ON PENSION INVESTIGATION WITH LEGISLATURE NEXT WEEK

NEW YORK, NY (May 15, 2008) - Attorney General Andrew M. Cuomo today announced that he will hold a public
hearing on employment arrangements at Long Island school districts as part of his statewide investigation into pension fraud
in New York's school districts, local governments, and special districts. The hearing will be held in conjunction with members
of the New York State Senate and Assembly.

Cuomo also announced a broad expansion of his investigation into "double dipping" by seeking information from all
685 school districts in New YorkState
regarding the hiring of retired individuals who are already receiving public pensions. Cuomo previously sought such information
from all school districts on Long Island.

"New Yorkers need to know that their tax dollars are not being wasted on state benefits for those who do not deserve
them," said Attorney General Cuomo. "We are expanding our investigation to determine whether 'double dippers' engaged in any
fraudulent activities and we are holding a public hearing to shine a light on questionable employment practices in our school
districts. The fraud that this investigation has already uncovered is inexcusable, and it's going to end now."

Attorney General Cuomo is investigating the practice of school districts permitting employees to "double dip," allowing
them to earn both salaries and pensions simultaneously. The Attorney General's office will now be examining whether this is
a proper use of public funds, whether these practices and their implementation violate existing laws and regulations, and
whether existing law needs to be clarified as to these practices.

The Office of the Attorney General is sending a letter to every school district in the State seeking information
about these "double dipping" practices. The letter requests:

a.. The identity of all current employees who are receiving public pensions in addition to their salaries, as well
as the amounts of their salaries and pensions; b.. Whether districts specifically classified these employees in a
manner intended

to permit them to collect both their salaries and pensions simultaneously;

c.. Whether the districts can document a real need to hire retired individuals as opposed to otherwise qualified non-retired
individuals;

d.. The cost to the public of paying both the salaries and the pensions of these employees; and

e.. Any and all communications, including applications and certifications, between the districts and any state agencies
concerning the employment of the specified employees who were already receiving pensions.

On May 22, 2008, Attorney General Cuomo will preside over a public hearing where he will hear testimony related
to his statewide investigation into pension fraud. The Attorney General will be joined at the hearing by New York State Senate
Deputy Majority Leader Dean Skelos, Assemblymember Robert Sweeney, Senator Kenneth LaValle, and Assemblymember Earlene Hooper.
These legislators were designated by the Senate Majority Leader and the Speaker
of the Assembly.

Attorney General Cuomo continued, "At the hearings, we will explore not only the current state of our investigation,
but also potential legislative solutions that may save taxpayers millions of dollars going forward."

New York State Senate Deputy Majority Leader Dean Skelos (R-Rockville Centre) said, "Taxpayers have the right to
expect that every penny of their school taxes is spent in the classroom. This practice is an abuse of taxpayers and Attorney
General Andrew Cuomo and I are working together to develop comprehensive legislation that will ensure that this type of fraud
never occurs again."

New York State Assemblymember Robert Sweeney (D-Lindenhurst) said, "This appears to
be an abuse of the public trust. The average Employee Retirement System member receives a pension of less than $15,000. The
average pension in the Teachers' Retirement System is $34,412. It's galling that some of these local appointed officials 'game'
the system. These public hearings are an important tool to bring attention to these practices. I commend Attorney General
Cuomo for shedding light on this issue."

New York State Assemblymember Earlene Hooper (D-Hempstead) said, "The costs of double dipping to New Yorkers cannot
be understated. We are holding hearings to make clear that it is no longer OK to ignore this widespread problem. Attorney
General Cuomo is on the front lines of this battle to root out fraud and see that state funds and benefits are properly spent."

Attorney General Cuomo's ongoing investigation of pension fraud has expanded to include more than 4,000 local governments
and special districts across New YorkState
and all 37 Boards of Cooperative Educational Services ("BOCES"). The investigation has already revealed that many lawyers
had remained on school districts' or BOCES' payrolls for such extended periods of time, or were included on the payrolls of
so many school districts or BOCES simultaneously, that they accumulated substantial credits in the New York State Employees'
Retirement System. Last week, Cuomo announced settlement agreements with a western New
York law firm and a Capital Region attorney that ended their improper employment arrangements with
school districts and various BOCES and rescinded all public benefits they had wrongfully received.

The Attorney General's office urges individuals with knowledge of any questionable arrangements between any BOCES,
local governments, or school districts and their outside professionals to contact the Public Integrity Bureau by telephone
at 212-416-8090 or by e-mail at public.integrity@oag.state.ny.us.

FEB. 14-17: Newsday reports that five Long Island school districts falsely reported to the state that part-time private
attorney Lawrence Reich was a full-time employee in each district, enabling him to earn a $62,000 pension and health benefits
for life. A federal grand jury in Suffolk opens an investigation into possible fraudulent double-dipping at the districts;
FBI agents subpoena the districts' financial records, and the state comptroller's office says it will audit four of the five
districts. Newsday reports that Joseph Dragone, the Harborfields school official who made light of Reich's employment arrangement
in a letter, retired from that district with a $122,000 pension and today makes $190,000 in the Roslyn school district as
an interim superintendent.

At least 12 present or former attorneys at an Albany law firm, including a current commissioner of the state Public Service
Commission, are under investigation by state Attorney General Andrew Cuomo for improperly getting state pension credits from
a single BOCES district upstate, according to sources familiar with the investigation and attorneys for some of those involved.

State Attorney General Andrew Cuomo's investigation into the possibly improper awarding of state pensions to attorneys
for school districts has escalated sharply, and now includes a host of other professionals who may also have received state
pension credits, according to sources familiar with the investigation.

The New York State comptroller is reviewing the case of a private attorney in Nassau County who received 21 years of retroactive
pension credits -- helping him earn a six-figure annual pension -- even though he had been paid as an independent contractor
all those years, a spokesman said Monday.

New York State Attorney General Andrew Cuomo Thursday night said his office believes that "multiple acts of fraud" were
committed when Long Island school districts put private attorneys on their payrolls so that the attorneys could receive hundreds
of thousands of dollars in state pensions.

Twenty-three school districts -- nearly one-fifth of all the school districts on Long Island -- improperly reported private
attorneys as employees, which helped the attorneys earn public pensions totaling more than $342,082 a year, plus health benefits
worth thousands more, a Newsday review of records has found.

Five school districts incorrectly classified a private attorney as an employee, allowing him to obtain a yearly pension
of nearly $62,000 to which he was not entitled, the State comptroller said in an opinion released Friday.

Hewlett-Woodmere school officials more than doubled the salary of a private attorney on its payroll in his last two years
at the district -- substantially boosting his New York State pension -- while paying his law firm more than $400,000 in additional
fees during those same years, district records show.

The investigation into possible double-dipping by attorneys working for school districts in obtaining state pensions expanded
markedly Wednesday, as State Attorney General Andrew Cuomo asked for information about potential financial irregularities
from all 704 school districts across the state.

Carol Hoffman, one of three Long Island attorneys under federal and state investigation for their financial relationships
with school districts, asked the Glen Cove school district to put her on the payroll in 2001, justifying it by saying that
three other districts were doing the same thing, according to her letter.

A slew of federal agents ranged out over Long Island yesterday hand-delivering grand jury subpoenas to more than two dozen
school districts as part of an investigation into possible double-dipping by attorneys employed by some of the districts,
according to school officials, attorneys and sources.

Carol Hoffman, one of three Long Island attorneys currently under federal and state investigation for their employment
arrangements with school districts, solicited the Roslyn school district in writing in 1998 asking to be put on the payroll
and explaining that she wanted to get more credit in the state pension system.

It started for Lawrence Reich behind the towering marble columns of the New York State Education Department, across the
street from the state Capitol in Albany. It ended for him beneath the gold-framed Gustav Klimt posters in a law firm's conference
room in Hauppauge.

The investigation into possible financial misconduct at Long Island school districts has escalated sharply as New York
State Attorney General Andrew Cuomo requested that all 124 districts on Long Island provide extensive information on their
relationships with lawyers and law firms for the past eight years.

The investigation into allegations of financial wrongdoing at a number of Long Island school districts has mushroomed,
with the New York State Attorney General's office subpoenaing the records of two more law firms and federal agents, in a parallel
investigation, serving subpoenas on officials in a number of school districts.

Long Islanders interviewed yesterday by Newsday expressed mostly outrage about Lawrence Reich and other private attorneys
who have been listed by school districts as employees, enabling them to earn state pensions, while their law firms were also
being paid fees by those districts. Some of those interviewed demanded a thorough county investigation of the matter, while
others said the money paid to the lawyers should be used to fund teacher salaries and after-school programs.

Six more Long Island school districts listed two private attorneys as employees, enabling them to earn state pensions,
while also paying their law firms more than $1 million in fees, state and district records show.

Feb. 14: Newsday.com reports that five Long Island school districts falsely reported to the state that part-time
private attorney Lawrence Reich was a full-time employee in each district, enabling him to earn a public pension of nearly
$62,000 and health benefits for life.

The Harborfields school official who made light of Lawrence Reich's employment arrangement in a letter warning him to "correct
the record" now works in the Roslyn school district, which has weathered its own financial scandal in recent years.

State Attorney General Andrew Cuomo yesterday started an investigation, parallel to an ongoing federal probe, into possible
financial misconduct at five Long Island school districts, issuing a subpoena for records at the Hauppauge law firm of Ingerman
Smith, according to a spokesman for Cuomo and an attorney for the firm.

A small-town law firm founded in 1937, Ingerman Smith grew into a legal powerhouse, representing more than one-third of
all the school districts on Long Island and racking up millions of dollars in fees.

Five Long Island school districts falsely reported to the state that a part-time private attorney was a full-time employee
in each district, enabling him to earn a public pension of nearly $62,000 and health benefits for life.